Intraepithelial Lymphocytes and LAIR1 Expression in Celiac Disease

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Background: Celiac disease (CD) is a gluten-sensitive immune-related enteropathy of the small intestine characterized by villus atrophy, crypt hyperplasia, and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs). Objectives: To characterize the phenotype of IELs and immune cells of the lamina propria of small intestine control using immuno-oncology and immune-phenotype markers and test the most relevant marker, an immune checkpoint co-inhibitory receptor, leukocyte associated immunoglobulin like receptor 1 (LAIR1) in CD. Methods: Immunohistochemical analysis of CD3, CD4, CD8, CD103 (ITGAE), Granzyme B, TCR beta (β), TCR delta (δ), CD56 (NCAM), CD16, LAIR1 (CD305), PD-L1, PD1 (CD279), BTLA (CD272), TOX2, HVEM (TNFRSF14), CD163, HLA-DP-DQ, IL4I1, and FOXP3 was performed using histological analysis. Gene expression analysis was performed using an independent dataset to expand and confirm the findings. Results: IELs exhibited a cytotoxic T-cell phenotype and were positive for CD3, CD8, CD103, TCRβ, and LAIR1. The lamina propria was abundant in CD163, HLA-DP-DQ, BTLA, PD-L1, CD103, CD56, and LAIR1-positive cells corresponding to macrophages and T- and B-lymphocytes. In CD, IELs and part of the inflammatory cells of the lamina propria cells were LAIR1-positive. CD was characterized by higher LAIR1-positive cell expression than the small intestine control (P = 0.004). Higher intestinal lesions evaluated by Marsh scoring were correlated with higher LAIR1 (P < 0.001). Gene expression analysis confirmed the overexpression of the LAIR1 pathway in CD and highlighted BTLA. At the protein level, BTLA overexpression was confirmed in CD. Finally, as a proof-of-concept AI analysis, a convolutional neural network classified LAIR1-stained image-patches between the 3 diagnoses of small intestine control, CD, and reactive tonsils with high accuracy (99.6%). Conclusions: IELs exhibit cytotoxic T-cell phenotype and are CD3, CD8, CD103, TCRβ, and LAIR1 positive in small intestine control. Increased numbers of LAIR1-positive IELs and lamina propria immune cells characterize CD.

Article activity feed